
ETHNIC GROUPS, DEVELOPMENT AND - ' CURRENT SITUATION IN NUNUKAN* By John Haba ** Abstrak Pada tahun 2000, Nunukan diresmikan sebagai kabupaten baru dalam wilayah administratif Provinsi Kalimantan Timur. Peranan kabupaten baru ini semakin meningkat sebab sebagai "transit zone" ke Tawau (Sabah), Nunukan juga menjadi lokasi pemulangan Tenaga Kerja Indonesia dari Malaysia pada tahun 2002. Permasalahan yang timbul untuk setiap wilayah perbatasan adalah terjadinya praktik penyelundupan manusia dan barang serta berbagai jenis komoditas lainnya. Keterbatasan sarana dan prasarana ikut mempengaruhi penanganan pemulangan TKI yang tidak terencana dengan baik. Sebagaimana lazimnya daerah perbatasan (border areas) sebagai lokasi mencari pekerjaan, kehadiran berbagai kelompok etnis memicu kecemburuan, sebab dominasi yang menyolok di sektor perekonomian dan posisi sosial antara warga setempat dengan para pendatang. Homogenitas kelompok etnis, penguasaan sumber-sumber alam dan permasalahan TKI (apabila tidak ditangani dengan tepat) dapat berakibat negatif terhadap perkembangan kabupaten yang baru ini. In 2002, Nunukan was authoritative as new regency in East Kalimantan. The role of this new regency become more important for its function as a "transit zone" to Tawau (Sabah) and Nunukan is also used as a transit place for TKI (Indonesian Labor Force) that being deported from Malaysia in 2002. Other problems that may occur in border areas are human smuggling and commodities smuggling. For Nunukan, the major difficulty in handling the TKI deportation was this regency has no sufficient infrastructure to cope the amount of TKI. The increase of its migrant population puts more burdens on the local government. The present migrants from of various ethnic groups were set enviousness that causes a striking domination in economic sector and social lives. These kinds of homogeneity which related to ethnicity, resources and occupation may create negative effects to the Nunukan 's development. Keywords: Nunukan, Transit zone, Border areas, Ethnic groups • This paper was presented at "Borneo Research Conference" (BRC) in Kinabalu in Juli 2002. Some materials cited in the paper have been rewritten. •• John Haba is a Researcher Center for Society and Culture, Indonesian Institute of Sciences, Jakarta. Vol. I, No. I, 2006 53 INTRODUCTION This paper focuses on three major related issues in Nunukan, East Kalimantan namely: ethnic groups, development and potential for conflict that may occur in the coming years. The importance of these issues in Nunukan 's setting are highlighted by its role as a new regency lying along border lines with various ethnic groups, it with limited resources for absorbing job seekers either from Nunukan, East Kalimantan or other migrants. The increase in its migrant population puts more burdens on the local administration making it more difficult to cope with the complexity of existing issues. The change from sub-district to district in 2000 was difficult. New development patterns have to be adopted stemming from social, economic and political pressures, simultaneously attempting to ensure external conditions from provincial and central levels of government did not increase Nunukan 's burdens. These phenomena are being examined then related them Indonesian society today; where ethnic and religious issues are easily ignited and finally manifested in riots, violence, conflict and enmity as can be observed also elsewhere in Kalimantan, Maluku, Riau, etc .. Currently more people in Nunukan are out ofwork; their numbers are increased by returning workers from Malaysia who are also jobless yet still stay in the district; migrants dominate the government and economic sectors; and smuggling of goods (electronic and logs) is on-going. These factors combined with strong ethnic sentiments have the potential to escalate into unavoidable conflict among the members of the Nunukan community if no solutions are found in the coming years. Data presented in this paper based mainly on fieldwork carried out in August 200 I. When researching ethnic groups, it is important to verify information volunteered. For example on my first field trip to Nunukan in August 200 I, I received misleading information, when I asked a person in Samarinda, whether I could meet the Dayak people in City ofNunukan. He replied convincingly "do not worry Pak you will meet them over there as well as in Kalimantan". My first impression was, for those who deal with ethnic studies will be confused with the answer, because Kalimantan for long time has been [occupied] not simply by the Dayaks but also by other ethnic groups. I sought to clarify this information. First, did the man provide me with a correct reply that "all people living in City of Nunukan are Dayaks"? Second, who was the man and which ethnic group did he belong to? Or he was the man whose attachment to the Dayak people. The above prelude seems indisputable for common people who are not interested in studying ethnic composition; ethnic struggles and mainly ethnic conflicts have emerged around us frequently in the last ten years. The majority ofpeople who are not interested in studying ethnic composition have become aware of ethnic struggles and conflicts that have emerged only in the last ten years, particularly those issues currently involving 'indigenous' and 'foreigners' (Us versus Them) such as experienced among the Dayaks and the Madurese in West Kalimantan and Central Kalimantan. A stereotype assumption 54 Jurnal Kependudukan Indonesia that only one ethnic group dominates an island could be misleading. Truly, if we believe that Kalimantan is inhabited by the Dayaks and Nunukan by the Tidungs, it will demarcate and ignore the existence of other ethnic groups. Furthermore, focusing too much discourse on the experiences of the Dayaks over their land rights has to be careful in the current social turmoil. It could generate hostility toward those who are considered to be ruining the unity of the Dayaks' social fabric and related aspects of their existence. Thoughts on the existence of the Dayak people, but to address the matter logically is to reposition an appropriate paradigm, to recognize physical and social spaces and rights of all of the citizens to live together in multiethnic country such as Indonesia. From the political dimension, government's recognition of the existence and rights of all ethnic groups, by making many reviews on useless laws, legislations and stipulations, concerning who are the ethnic groups in Indonesia, should be valued as a histo.rical necessity in current Indonesian social and political chaos. Depending mostly on agriculture for their livelihood, the Tidungs occupy 5 administrative areas ofNunukan, respectively: Sembakung, Lumbis, Sebatik, Krayan and Nunukan. Most ofNunukan 's people are Muslim. Before January 2000, Nunukan was the sub-district ofBulongan, but with the issue of Law No. 47 of 1999 Nunukan was officially established as a new district. Located along the border areas between East Kalimantan and Sabah, East Malasyia, Nunukan is like a 'promised land' for migrants from outside Kalimantan -like people from Adonara, East Flores, East Nusa Tenggara who first started entering the area in 1956 simply to find a place to work. A group arrived in Nunukan aboard a vessel constituting the beginning of the movement of people from Adonara into this area. Since then, the period ofmilitary clashes between Indonesia and Malaysia has resulted in more military and armed forces personnel being sent to Nunukan. Internal crisis, particularly economic crisis that hit Indonesia in the middle of July 1997 has pushed more people to come to Nunukan and use it as a stepping stone to find jobs in Sabah. Today, Nunukan is in process of developing various projects and recruiting manpower to meet its target as a new district. More jobs constructing roads, oil palm plantations, buildings and other infrastructures are encouraging competition among job seekers. ETHNIC GROUPS IN NuNUKAN: CoNDITION IN 2001 Based on Law No. 47 of 1999, issued on 7 June 2000, Nunukan, previously a part of Bulongan and classified as sub-district (kecamatan), now has its new administrative status as district (kabupaten). The Nunukan administrative territory 2 covers 14,657.7 km2 and consists of 5 sub-districts: Sebatik (821.17 km ), Lumbis 2 2 2 (2,656.5 km ), Sebakung (2,457. 7 km ) and Krayan (3, 114.2 km ). Overall, Nunukan has 212 vil1ages with a variety ofethnic groups living together, ranging from the Tidungs, the Javanese, migrants from South Sulawesi, the Dayaks, the Melayu and Banjar peoples, etc. Geographically, Nunukan has its boundary at Sulawesi Sea in the East, Vol. I, No. 1, 2006 55 Sarawak in the West, Sabah in the North and Bulongan and Malinau in the South. From demographic perspectives, Nunukan 's population in 1999 amounted to 81,4 72 with an approximate population growth rate of2.89 percent annually. Population density was around 5.59 persons per square kilometer. The number of incoming people (especially job seekers) to Nunukan according to ethnic background, shows that between 1998-2000, people from South Sulawesi made up 54,294 of the total, followed by people from Flores, East Nusa Tenggara, numbered at 15,107 and the rest from Java and other provinces. Nunukan, at the end of the Bulongan monarchy (1700-1958) and during the Dutch Colonial Administration constituted part of Bulongan district, with center of government located in Tanjung Selor, including the abundant natural resources of East Kalimantan territory. In 1999 Nunukan's annual income reached Rp 402.06 billion, with revenues from oil and gas contributing up to Rp 300.73 billion. Also in 1999 the economic growth rate ofNunukan was 4.68 percent. The major contributors were the agricultural sector ( 62.3 percent) and mining and other natural resources (25.43 percent), while trading, services and other small sectors contributed 8.8 percent, 1.6 percent and less than 1 percent respectively (Kabupaten Nunukan Dalam Angka, 1999: 155- 156). What do we mean by the term ethnic group?. Conventionally, an ethnic group is linked to some "traits' that distinguish it from another.
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